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When you boot from the DOS disk can you ping the storage location? Has your hardware or Network changed at all since you first used it? Are you IP addresses hard enforced on your network or are you using DHCP? Are you connecting through a switch or router? Are you trying to access a mapped drive or just access a drive through the network connection?
I dont know if I can ping or not, the dos disk made by Ghost doesnt include a dos ping utility. The net its the same, Im using a static address, Im connecting by a twisted cable (568A/568B), Im trying to connect to a mapped drive through a network connection.
While a crossover cable will allow you to direct connect to another machine both computer's NIC's, DOS was not designed with this in mind (pre-dates crossover cables). In order to be able to restore an image in Ghost 2003 from a network location, you must be able to log into the domain while in DOS. Since you do not have things configured that way you will not be able to access the other location using the current configuration. If you don't want to spend much more time on your configuration you can use a copy of Ghost 9/10, or Norton Save & Restore 1.0 to boot off of (which will load WinPE) where you can chose the "restore legacy ghost image" option and access the network location that way. Unfortunately you're just running up against limitations in DOS.
I'm sorry Erik, but you are WRONG. in the past I could connect using a crossover cable.
I don't know if this it's the english name for this kind of cable. It's 568A at one side and 568B at the other one. in fact I could log in, not in a domain because I'm not in one, but in my workgroup (for my home, 3 machines), and I could mount a network drive using "net use x: \\1923168.0.1\g" and from ghost restore the image stores in G to my laptops hardrive.
That wa, of course, before I reinstall windows xp a few months ago. It's the same cable, the same DOS diskettes, the same configuration, it just doesn't want to connect to my home PC and let me use the drive. It says someting like network share cannot be located in the speficied path...
Most of the time in the past I've used a crossover to directly connect. If you were logging into the workgroup before in this configuration, it sounds like the workgroup has changed. You said that you reinstalled Windows, is that on the system that you are trying to connect to? The message is pointing to the problem. The network share location is different. Do you have Ghost installed on this system? You may need to create a new boot floppy to account for the change in the Workgroup.